London Labour and the London Poor, Volume 1
Mayhew, Henry
1861
Of the Street-Sellers of Spectacles and Eye-Glasses.
years ago the street-trade in spectacles was almost entirely in the hands of the Jews, who hawked them in their boxes of jewellery, and sold them in the streets and publichouses, carrying them in their hands, as is done still. The trade was then far more remunerative that it is at the present time to the street-folk carrying it on. "People had more money then," old spectacle-seller, now vending sponges, said, "and there wasn't so many forced to take to the streets, Irish particularly, and opticians' charges were higher than they are now, and those who wanted glasses thought they were a take--in if they wasn't charged a fair price. O, times was very different then." | |
The spectacles in the street-trade are bought at swag-shops in . The "common metal frames," with or without slides, are to the dozen wholesale, and are retailed from to The "horn frames" are to the dozen, and are retailed from to , and even The "thin steel" are from to the dozen, and are retailed from to There are higher and lower prices, but those I have cited are what are usually paid by the streettraders. The inequality of the retail prices is accounted for by there being some difference in the spectacles in a dozen, some being of a betterlooking material in horn or metal; others better finished. Then there is the chance of which street-sellers are not slow to avail themselves— ("no more nor is shopkeepers," man said) —I mean, the chance of obtaining an enhanced price for an article, with whose precise value the buyer is unacquainted. | |
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The eye-glasses sold in the streets are "framed" in horn. They are bought at the same places as the spectacles, and cost, wholesale, for "single eyes" to the dozen. The retail price is from to The "double eyes," which are jointed in the middle so that the frame can be fitted to the bridge of the nose, are to the dozen, and are retailed by the street-folk from to each. | |
The spectacles are sold principally to working men, and are rarely hawked in the suburbs. The chief sale is in public-houses, but they are offered in all the busier thoroughfares and wherever a crowd is assembled. "The eye-glasses," said a man who vended them, "is sold to what I calls counter-hoppers and black-legs. You'll see most of the young swells that's mixed up with gaming concerns at races—for there's gaming still, though the booths is put down in many places—sport their eye-glasses; and so did them as used to be concerned in getting up Derby and St. Leger 'sweeps' at public-houses; least-ways I've sold to them, where sweeps was held, and they was busy about them, and offered me a chance, sometimes, for a handsome eye-glass. But they're going out of fashion, is eye-glasses, I think. The other day I stood and offered them for nearly hours at the foot of London-bridge, which used to be a tidy pitch for them, and I couldn't sell . All that day I didn't take a halfpenny." | |
There are sometimes men, the half of whom are Jews and Irishmen in equal propor- | |
445 | tions, now selling spectacles and eye-glasses. Some of these traders are feeble from age, accident, continued sickness, or constitution, and represent that they must carry on a "light trade," being incapable of hard work, even if they could get it. women sell spectacles along with Dutch drops. As in other "light trades," the spectacle sellers do not, as a body, confine themselves to those wares, but resort, as told me, "to anything that's up at the time and promises better," for a love of change is common among those who pursue a street life. It may be estimated, I am assured, that there are men (so allowing for the breaks in regular spectacle selling) who vend them daily, taking a week (with a profit of ), the yearly expenditure being thus |